November 28, 2010
The Center for Cartoon Studies
and the Museum of the City of New York present
Denys Wortman Rediscovered:
Drawings for the World-Telegram and Sun, 1930-1953
Nov 19 through Mar 20
Denys Wortman Rediscovered: Drawings for the World-Telegram and Sun, 1930-1953 is an exhibition of original cartoon drawings made for the World-Telegram and Sun illustrating episodes of everyday life in New York City. Formally trained in art at the New York School of Fine and Applied Art under the tutelage of Robert Henri and Kenneth Hayes Miller, Wortman was among a new generation of social realists who believed in the artistic possibilities of modern urban life as a creative subject. The benches at Union Square, the tenement rooftops on the Lower East Side, and the stifling garment industry sweatshops provided the backdrops for his drawings that, in combination with Wortman’s colorful characters, instill a sense of place that was distinctly “New York.”
Although Denys Wortman was a renowned artist during his lifetime, today his work is largely forgotten. This exhibition celebrates an artist who gave readers a daily glimpse into the causes and concerns of ordinary people during a tumultuous time in New York City’s history. His cartoons illustrate the complex social impact of the economic roller coaster that was the Roaring Twenties, the Great Depression and the eventual recovery of the Post-War years. Wortman’s city is filled with working class men and women trying to survive and struggling to get ahead, facing the joys and fears of modern urban life.
For more information: mcny.org
Tags: 1930s, 1940s, 1950s, Cartoon Drawings, CCS Gallery, Denys Wortman, Exhibition, Faculty, Fine Arts, gallery, Lower East Side, New York, Revitalization, social realism, The Center for Cartoon Studies, White River Junction, World-Telegram and Sun